We have virtually no evidence for what human society was like in prehistory. Palaeolithic cave paintings depict animals but very few humans. There are patterns made by human hands and the occasional stick figure but nothing to give us a clear picture of how these societies were arranged.
Did we, for instance, take lifelong partners and live in small family groups? If our nearest relatives, the great apes, are anything to go by, our ancestors most likely had random sex with different partners. Until, that is, human beings made the connection between sex and the creation of new life.
I argued in
a previous article (https://manicscribbler.blogspot.com/2017/06/the-earth-mother-rules-guest-author.html) that the earliest societies were
not only matrilineal (which makes perfect sense in a society where everybody
knows who their mother is and fathers don’t exist) but matriarchal.
It is
interesting to speculate what these societies were like and how they compare
with the patriarchal societies which followed.
For a start,
there seems to have been nothing we would describe as war in the Palaeolithic
age. Surely there must have been disagreements and tussles but nothing our
ancestors felt worthy of recording in paintings. In fact, we don’t see definite
evidence until the late Neolithic, well after the ancient matriarchal societies
have been suppressed.
This
doesn’t, of course, prove that rule by women is more benign than rule by men. It
could be simply that warfare only emerged as the human population increased so
much that resources became scarce. That war was, if you like, inevitable,
irrespective of the nature of government.
As for women leaders being naturally more nurturing and non-violent we know that this is not universal. Some of the most memorable women rulers were every bit as cruel and despotic as their male counterparts, Catherine the Great, for example, or our own dear Margaret Thatcher, who certainly had no aversion to war.
What we can
say, with reasonable confidence, is that war on any significant scale did not
exist before patriarchal government became the norm.
The
discovery that men had an equal role in the creation of children led to a
fundamental change in stone age societies. The only way of ensuring that a
man’s woman (or women) only gave birth to his children was to strictly
control her sexual activity. Now that women had been stripped of their magic
they no longer had the power to resist men’s superior physical strength, and so
women, rather than being the magical creators of life, were to become mere
vessels for the incubation of the seed of men.
Quite apart
from the obvious loss of quality of life that brought, it meant women, far from
being the rulers of these societies, no longer even had a voice. Virtually all
human societies since the stone age have been ruled by men, for men. The
struggle for equality has been going on for thousands of years and is still a
long way from reaching its goal.
And today,
watching a video of policemen kneeling on a helpless woman, I find myself
wondering about the Genesis myth. Poor Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden,
innocent of sin, beguiled by the serpent into eating the forbidden fruit. What
was the secret knowledge that was imparted to them? Not, surely, that they were
naked and should be ashamed. If God created them naked, what could be shameful
about it?
Could it be that the knowledge that caused them to be expelled from Paradise was the understanding of how children were conceived, which passed the power to men?
She left school at fifteen and went to work in an asbestos factory. After working in various jobs, including bacon-packer and escapologist’s assistant (she was The Lovely Tanya), she returned to full-time education and did a BA in history, at Manchester and post-graduate studies at Oxford.
She stayed in Oxford working as a recruitment consultant for many years and it was there that she met and married her husband, Vic.
In 2001 they retired and moved to Southern Spain where they live with their rather eccentric dogs and cat. Besides writing, she enjoys reading, knitting and attempting to do fiendishly difficult logic puzzles.
Since moving to Spain she has written four novels and numerous short stories.
In July 2018 she was awarded the coveted TOP FEMALE AUTHOR award in Fantasy/Horror/Paranormal/Science Fiction by The Authors Show.
3 comments:
Thank you so much for hosting me on your blog, Lynette.
It's such a privilege.
Love and hugs
Jenny
xxx
I really enjoyed that article Jenny. Very insightful.
Thank you, Debbie xxx
Post a Comment